Blast Hounds: Britain’s Army is Keeping Their Mine-Resistant Vehicles
Jan 12, 2014 15:00 UTCIn 2006, Britain started purchasing a trio of very different vehicles intended to helps their army patrols in high-threat areas. Their “Urgent Operational Requirement” orders were part of a general trend among Western militaries toward blast-resistant vehicles, in response to the widespread use of explosives by enemies in Iraq & Afghanistan. BAE was arguably the global leader in this area, but the beneficiary of Britain’s awakening was an American firm: Force Protection.
Britain originally chose Force Protection’s Cougar vehicles over BAE’s RG-33 family, and elected to continue that trend by adding the 4×4 “Ridgeback” patrol vehicles, 6×6 “Wolfhound” cargo variants, and now the modular 4×4 “Foxhound” light patrol vehicle. Specific figures weren’t given initially, and orders developed via ad-hoc additions rather than a long-term plan. Those figures emerged over time, along with field experience to back up the initial pros and cons of Britain’s modified Cougar design. Other urgent orders spread work to Navistar and Supacat. Now, many of these UOR buys are being folded back into the general force…